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[personal profile] altariel
I bunked off the other afternoon and committed fanfic.


Journey’s End

The two Rangers arrived late in the evening. The house was already full, so Eilen could not help but sigh to herself at the sight of them, though outwardly she was lady Welcome herself.

They looked as if they had been walking all day – and every day for several years before that. The younger one was thin, with restless hands; the older was greying and had a much easier way about him. Father and son? They were certainly enough alike. Two tall pale men with grey eyes and dark hair; Dúnedain, like the Rangers tended to be. Eilen had seen plenty of them; fewer these days, of course. The younger one pulled out their papers – bearing the Prince’s own seal, no less – which entitled them to board and lodgings at his expense. Eilen glanced behind her to the fire and the music and made a swift calculation. The other guests tonight were mostly merchants – cheerful, good-humoured. Pampered. All of whom had arrived earlier. Whereas Rangers, for all they’d done, were used to being outside... “I can do hot baths and supper,” she said, regretfully, “but you’ll see from the size of the company it will have to be the barn for the night.”

What happened next was quite strange. As Eilen watched, a slow happy smile crept over the younger man’s face. He turned to his companion and looked at him as if to say, Are those old bones of yours still up to it? In return, the other gave him a very narrow look and then turned to address Eilen directly. With a bow of the head and that impossible courtesy all his kind managed no matter what the journey had been like, he said, “Thank you, mistress – that will suit very well indeed.”

***


“Two Rangers,” Eilen explained to Bey, when he asked, and her husband raised his eyebrows in surprise. Rangers came this way less often now. The road here was the safest it had been since the war. The safest it had ever been, and Bey and Eilen should know.

Bey and Eilen first met when he was eighteen and she was fifteen. When he was twenty, Bey had gone away to war. Then he came back, and yet another year had passed, and finally Eilen had turned to the quiet steady man beside her and demanded to know when, if ever, he was going to ask her to marry him. So he’d asked her there and then and had got her answer right back. That had been fifteen years ago. One day, in the third year of their new life together, Bey had come home shaking with uncharacteristic excitement. When he had explained, Eilen had understood at once, and known as well as he did that they had to be part of it. The land was being resettled, out south along the road from Emyn Arnen, the land both their folk had fled all those many years ago. And what the Prince wanted now was people willing and able to keep the road open.

They knew they could do it. Bey’s mother kept an inn on the second circle of the City, and Eilen had been there since she was fifteen, and then had stayed throughout the siege to nurse. And Bey, of course, had been to war. So out they had come with a band of fellow fools and hopefuls, and here they had remained. At first it had been desperate – gates and locks and long dark uncertain nights, a fair few of those spent holding lamps over Rangers young and old as their companions pulled arrows out of them and did the best they could. And then one evening you looked round to find you were safe at home, and were laughing till the tears ran down your face as that plump and kindly spice merchant from Belfalas told you a likely story about his wife’s sister and some bats.

When the two rangers reappeared, looking much less grubby, Eilen led them to the last quiet corner and made good the promise of supper. The younger one ate like a sixteen year old; the older less impressively but still very well. When he was done, he sat back and lit his pipe, and watched with mild interest as the other made short work of the rest of the apple pie. They talked only a little, and when they did, it was in that soft grey speech the Rangers were in the habit of using amongst themselves. When the younger one finally finished his supper, he leaned back too and began to watch the room, his arm slung carelessly across the back of his chair. Eilen saw that his fingers were shifting in time slightly with the music. As they should. They were well known in the area, up and down the road either way, for the very good music they made here under the sign of the Seven Stars.

Geyst started up another song, a newer one he had taken a fancy to over the past few weeks. Eilen was sure he would move on from it soon, but in the meantime she would be busy whenever he sang it. She took the ale back around the room, stopping to talk at each table. A verse and a chorus in, she glanced over at her rangers – and the sight of the younger one took her breath away. His hand had gone dead still; his face was stricken. Eilen looked at him with pity. Well, that was not so hard to read. A friend, perhaps? No, not a friend, not that particular look and this particular song. A brother. Had to be. Eilen picked up the flask, and began to weave her way through the crush to the corner of the room.

Oh, but these new songs, the ones the men had brought back with them, they could crack the heart open within you if you weren’t prepared. Aydan and Bey had gone to war, and Bey had come back, and then sat patiently beside his brother’s sweetheart for a year until she was done with her own grieving, and ready to begin the dance again. And they had come out here together. And they were growing old out here together, while that beautiful daring boy she had loved so much lay cold in the ground in the north somewhere, before a black and broken gate. Two brothers went to war and one came back: a story so terrible and so ordinary one man could make a song about it, which another man could sing as if it were his own, and bring tears to a third man’s eyes. And he did sing it so well, didn’t he?

Eilen was not even halfway across the room when the older one, taking his pipe out of his mouth, leaned forwards to say something to his companion. The younger man started and stared across the empty plates at his friend. He wiped his hand across his mouth, said something which earned a quick reply – and then, wonderfully, the younger man began to laugh. He put his hand to his forehead, and laughed until his shoulders shook and the tears ran down his face, while his friend watched on as if he had just achieved a victory as great and unexpected as breaking down a black gate. When the younger one recovered his composure, he turned back to listen to the music again, and his face now bore a smile of unusual and vivid beauty. Later, Eilen heard one of them – she wasn’t sure which – whistling off-key as they went outside to bed.

***


She made the breakfasts bigger than usual to make up for the accommodation, but to her eyes both men looked as if they had had a perfectly good night’s sleep. She watched them from the kitchen step as they planned the day’s journey. The younger one seemed to be doing all the talking, gesturing with outstretched hand north and west towards the royal hills, while the older one listened and nodded every so often, seeming happy to follow his lead. As they were about to head off, Eilen, sorry to see them go, called after them, “Will we see you back this way again, do you think?”

The two men exchanged a look. The younger one tilted his head at his friend, almost quizzically. Thinking about the old man’s bones again, perhaps. “Neither of us travel as much as we used to,” the older one said, and the younger nodded regretful agreement. True enough, and Eilen was sorry for that too, even if it could only mean a change for the better that the Rangers were no longer needed in this part of the kingdom.

“Well, it’s a shame,” she said and then, thinking of the seal they were carrying, added, “But you tell that Prince of ours when you speak to him that we don’t see enough of your company down this way these days. I’m sure he can do something about that. You’re always welcome here, each and every one of you.” She laughed. “I’ll even make sure there’s beds free next time!”

The younger man smiled back at her; a swift glimpse once more of last night’s brilliant smile. “I’ll be certain to mention it. Next time I speak to the Prince.”

“Who’ll no doubt pass it over to the King to decide,” said his friend, dryly.

The King. Eilen laughed at the very idea, and waved her dishcloth at them to shoo them on their way. They were small figures in the distance before she remembered she had meant to ask them their names and if they were indeed father and son. She supposed, in the end, it didn’t matter. But she was as good as her word about the beds, to Bey’s horror, given that merchants and so on were the bulk of their business these days and didn’t much like finding themselves turned out into the barn. But it wasn’t that often, he had to agree. Not these days.

***

A/N: For Alawa, who likes Rangers. The song Geyst sings may or may not be like Fairport Convention’s cover of Neil Gow’s Apprentice, which I was listening to while writing this.

Altariel, 11th June 2007
Page 1 of 3 << [1] [2] [3] >>

Date: 2007-06-14 02:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lindahoyland.livejournal.com
I enjoyed this very much. Are they more than they seem to be,these two?

Date: 2007-06-14 03:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrkinch.livejournal.com
Ah, that was good. I much enjoyed your presentation of the resettlement "out south". And I, too, like rangers.

Date: 2007-06-14 03:49 am (UTC)
kerravonsen: Edmund + Aslan: "Ransomed Soul" (Edmund)
From: [personal profile] kerravonsen
(smile)

I'm tossing up in my mind whether those anonymous rangers were Faramir and his son, or Aragon and his son. Or another combination of same... 8-)

Date: 2007-06-14 04:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jeanniemctavish.livejournal.com
Oh. Oh, my. This is beautiful...simple, elegaic, sort of quietly hopeful. Ordinary people picking up the pieces of their lives after the epic events of LOTR, moving on and finding peace. I love stories about "what happened after", especially when - like this one - they acknowledge the impact of the past in small, realistic ways but don't beat the reader over the head with canon references. This rings true in every detail, and your prose is so lovely.

And I thought all that *before* I figured out who the Rangers were. (At least, I know who *I* think they are...) Then I read it again with that in mind, and loved it even MORE for giving me a glimpse of two favourite characters finding peace and healing of their own. The idea of the two of them temporarily escaping from their duties and going rangering together makes me very happy. :)

But it almost doesn't matter who the mysterious two are - I think the wonderful thing about this (one of many) is that it's powerful and evocative even if they are just anonymous Rangers. SO well done!

Makes me want to dust off the Fourth Age fic I've been poking at for years (literally, years. Sigh.)...

Thank you for this!

Date: 2007-06-14 04:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] applegnat.livejournal.com
*cries*

Oh my goodness. I. Thank you.

I think you're one of the reasons I began writing LotR fanfic and reading this just reminded me why. You have this way of using simple, forthright language and situations to unearth all the poignancy and sweetness and sadness of Middle-earth, and the passage of time.

Date: 2007-06-14 04:38 am (UTC)
kerravonsen: Susan aiming bow and arrows: "Sharp Mind" (sharp-mind)
From: [personal profile] kerravonsen
Hmmmm. I'm thinking this over, and now I think it must be Aragorn and Faramir...

Cool. 8-)

Date: 2007-06-14 04:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lame-pegasus.livejournal.com
Ohhh... that was simply marvelous. Absolutely brilliant, clever characterization, beautifully caught atmosphere and all.

Brava.

Aragorn and Faramir, I would guess.

And I want to translate it. It has been far too long that I did one of your stories.


Date: 2007-06-14 06:20 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hafren.livejournal.com
I stopped trying to figure who they were (though it does sound like Aragorn and Faramir from that exchange about passing decisions over) when I decided it didn't matter; it was two men who had been in a war.

I love the bit about the power of the song. One of my favourite bits from Kenneally's Schindler's Ark (which didn't, AFAIR, make it into the film) was when the Roma violinist playing to Nazis realises that if he plays a certain suicidally sad song often enough, one of them is going to go outside and shoot himself...

Date: 2007-06-14 07:12 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] edge-of-ruin.livejournal.com
Oh what a lovely present! Rangers and folk music *yum* Thanks!

Date: 2007-06-14 09:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] phyloxena.livejournal.com
Lovely. I wish they were Aragorn and Faramir, but F. cannot look and act sixteen twenty years after the war.

Date: 2007-06-14 09:23 am (UTC)
kathyh: (Kathyh Aragorn sword)
From: [personal profile] kathyh
I love it when you commit fanfic :) That was so beautiful in such an understated way. I loved the way that the war had become a song and a memory but these people lived in peace. As to the Rangers' identity I'm pretty sure I know who they are but they could be anybody and this fic would still have the same impact.

Date: 2007-06-14 01:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] valderys.livejournal.com
Even with Numenorean blood? I think it's just about possible.

Date: 2007-06-14 05:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] forodwaith.livejournal.com
Ah, lovely, with almost a "Tolkien by way of LeGuin" feel to it -- Eilen could be a Gontish innkeeper.

Date: 2007-06-14 06:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] katlinel.livejournal.com
That is lovely.

And I particularly enjoyed this line.

Then he came back, and yet another year had passed, and finally Eilen had turned to the quiet steady man beside her and demanded to know when, if ever, he was going to ask her to marry him.

:-)

Especially since it's followed up by this.

Aydan and Bey had gone to war, and Bey had come back, and then sat patiently beside his brother’s sweetheart for a year until she was done with her own grieving, and ready to begin the dance again. And they had come out here together. And they were growing old out here together, while that beautiful daring boy she had loved so much lay cold in the ground in the north somewhere, before a black and broken gate. Two brothers went to war and one came back: a story so terrible and so ordinary one man could make a song about it, which another man could sing as if it were his own, and bring tears to a third man’s eyes. And he did sing it so well, didn’t he?

That was a punch to the gut.

I'm afraid I just assumed two anonymous rangers, despite the above passage, although I did think that there were parallels between Eowyn and Eilen. Am dense.

Date: 2007-06-14 09:16 pm (UTC)
genarti: Knees-down view of woman on tiptoe next to bookshelves (slanting sunbeams)
From: [personal profile] genarti
Oh, I love this. Ordinary people, ordinary lives -- and the Rangers who might be any two rangers, or might be ones whose names we'd recognize if we knew them, but does it matter? As Eilen thinks, the story that brings them to tears is terrible and ordinary, and happened to many.

I love stories of picking up the pieces and building lives out of them, and stories of secrets that don't need to be told, and this is both. And told with a lovely slow lyricism.

Date: 2007-06-14 11:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ex-lark-asc.livejournal.com
I too have perpetrated the fic of the fan. It's over at [livejournal.com profile] doomcanary. And just as soon as I've stopped being a human thunderstorm detector there may well be more. It's Stargate though, so you may wish to avoid it with a ten-foot bargepole in case it knocks you off the wagon :)

Date: 2007-06-15 06:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] windswept1.livejournal.com
Ooooohhh!!!! This is sooo lovely. It needs a tissue alert! I loved the mood that prevails all through and the characterisation (they have to be Aragorn and Faramir!).

I'm so glad to see more fic from you. Reading this reminds me how much I love your writing. And now I want to know what was said to the younger one:)

Date: 2007-06-15 06:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fictualities.livejournal.com
And they were growing old out here together, while that beautiful daring boy she had loved so much lay cold in the ground in the north somewhere, before a black and broken gate. Two brothers went to war and one came back: a story so terrible and so ordinary one man could make a song about it, which another man could sing as if it were his own, and bring tears to a third man’s eyes.

*sobs*

I love this. You make the case here that the story of a lost brother is such a universal that it really doesn't matter who these Rangers are (though like others here I'm guessing Aragorn and Faramir).

Loved especially the way you don't specify what it was that Aragorn (surely) said to Faramir to make him laugh, at last, so long after Boromir's death. I suppose that like the identity of the Rangers, the specific content of the joke really doesn't matter: laughter and recovery are inevitable given time and care and infinite patience (something Aragorn was very good at -- and how lovely to think that this recovery of Faramir's would be one of the many acts of healing that Aragorn would perform in his kingship).

Fantastic post-war, thank you so much for it!

Date: 2007-06-16 02:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] altariel.livejournal.com
I think you can still have your wish if you want - he only eats like a sixteen year old and, besides, it's all seen through Eilen's somewhat romanticized eyes :-)

Date: 2007-06-16 02:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] altariel.livejournal.com
My pleasure! :-D

ACC arrived yet?

Date: 2007-06-16 02:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] altariel.livejournal.com
Thank you! :-) I think they could well be more than they seem...

Date: 2007-06-16 02:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] altariel.livejournal.com
I'm thinking you're closer! ;-)

Date: 2007-06-16 07:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] phyloxena.livejournal.com
Eilen must approve of people who eat well. I love her inn with good merchants and sad back story. Why do these Rangers eat at Prince's expense and don't carry their own coin?
Do you mind if I nominate this on MEFA?

Date: 2007-06-17 04:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] edge-of-ruin.livejournal.com
ACC arrived yet?

Nooo;-( And it's only coming from a U.K. bookseller. Nothing for it but to re-read earlier books while I wait.

Date: 2007-06-18 09:13 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] altariel.livejournal.com
Got it this morning?!
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